Comments

From Kacy Shelley : This was one of two shorts aired with "Winnie The Pooh
and Christmas, Too". The other one was
The Hockey Champ.

Simply, this one cracked me up. Humphrey really needed that sleep after
one of the other bears (forgot the names) "pinched [him]!" I also like when
Donald turned the photo frame of the bears around, and it showed their backs.

From Ryan : Humphrey is kicked out
of the cave because of his obnoxious snoring. He then seeks refuge in Ranger
Donald's cabin. I enjoy this Humphrey cartoon quite a bit even though it
has limited animation.

From Trae Robinson : I always remember
the part where Donald turns the photo frame over and it shows the bears'
backs. I think I haven't seen the ending. I would really like to see this
cartoon again anytime soon.

From Baruch Weiss : I first saw
this cartoon as a very young kid (2 or 3) on Donald's Quack Attack. I now
have it on "The Chronological Donald: Volume 4" The funniest scene is where
that stupid (in a funny sense) hollers "Ow, Humphrey pinched me!"

From Bryan Hensley : I don't remember
seeing this short in Cinemascope-widescreen before, but the Fullscreen version
is still a hoot! Humphrey tried his best to find a place to hibernate all
winter! For those of you who think this short had limited animation, probably
hasn't seen any of The New Three Stooges cartoons or Fat Albert cartoons.
They may be experts at "limited animation", but they were still popular!
I believe someone made a mistake when one of the bears yelled "OW! Humphrey
pinched me!" That was Humphrey who was speaking! At the end, when Donald
kicked him out of the cabin, Humphrey disguised himself as an abandoned
"big baby" and the other bears took him in. They seemed to have a hard time
sleeping after hearing Humphrey snore in a cradle! If you see this short
either fullscreen or widescreen, you're in for chaos as only Donald and
Humphrey would do! Personally, my family prefers fullscreen presentations
of anything, and so do I. We shouldn't have to put up with black bars, big
or small, throughout the movies, whether our TVs have 16x9 technology or
not.